The Rogue SX100B 4-string electric bass guitar is a great-playing little axe featuring a smaller, lighter body that shoulders everywhere will appreciate. It has a bolt-on, 34"-scale maple neck with a rosewood fretboard and dot inlays. Thick, durable, high-gloss finish on body, neck, and headstock. Chrome hardware. With split-coil pickup and tone and volume controls. A fine beginner instrument with less heft and great playability!

I got for my birthday and I was amazed! It sounds great! Although, their are somethings I didn't like about it. The neck is wider which I don't like. I didn't like...Read complete review

I got for my birthday and I was amazed! It sounds great! Although, their are somethings I didn't like about it. The neck is wider which I don't like. I didn't like the placement of the pegs. It's hard to get around the giant point at the top.

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You get what you pay for with this one

I bought this Rogue SX100B Series II Electric Bass Guitar Regular Candy Apple Red for my son for Christmas and was reminded that although sometimes you get more than you pay for, sometimes you...Read complete review

I bought this Rogue SX100B Series II Electric Bass Guitar Regular Candy Apple Red for my son for Christmas and was reminded that although sometimes you get more than you pay for, sometimes you get less... this time it's LESS. For starters the construction is cheap, lightweight and fragile, and I doubt that the machine heads will hold up long as they are binding right out of the box. Now on to playability: the main problem here is the action. Even with the saddle bottomed out it's still way too high. To fix this problem I'll have to shim the neck to bring it up (not a good thing to have to do). Intonation is going to be a beast also but with several hours and some tricks picked up along the years hopefully I can get it close. The electronics are also shotty but I'm not going to replace them because the body's not worth dumping the money in, he'll just have to deal with it. Overall this bass is not worth the low price that it's being sold for. Maybe they have a better model but I doubt it. If you want a beginner bass I'd suggest looking at something besides this one (I'd recommend the Peavey Millennium bass for a starter if you can scrape up the extra cash).binding machine heads, cheezy electronics, and terrible action and intonation!lightweight, cheap and fragile... no bass should be fragileThe price is cheap but this model's just not worth the price.

I've been through the whole "touring" thing. I was diagnosed with a brain tumor and had to move back home. I am a drummer building a small studio. I'm not one to use factory anything but I could not even tune to standard without the "D" string snapping. As I was re-stringing I found it was unable to get tight enough to even tune. It felt as if the gears on the tuners were stripped. I called to report the issue and send it back. I was put on hold then disconnected after 30 seconds. So now I'm stuck with this stringless bass.

This Guitar has great Pickups. You can get any sound that you want out of this. Great response, you can play Country, or Slap it, Rock, or Jazz. This Guitar has it all. I wouldn't trade mine for anything, I don't care how well others are so popular. You can't go wrong with this Guitar.

I love to collect low price instruments, so I bought a electric guitar, 4 string bass and 5 string bass(everything is the cheapest one in Squier)This bass is made well than cheapest Squier.(especially fret)I recommend this to starter.

Honestly, I may not be the best reviewer in the world, but I don't see why everybody hates this bass so much. I mean sure, theres a fret buzz when you get higher up the kneck, but other than that, all of my problems with it are just because I'm tiny. If your a small person, don't buy this bass, because I have had a super hard time dealing with the wide kneck and I can't stretch my fingers out over more than 3 frets until the 14th.

It is a lightweight bass, and that is great, but that doesn't mean shotty workmanship at all. I dropped mine once and even though there is a 2 inch indentation at the bottom, it still plays the same. The electronic cavity isn't bad at all, which is good because my electric cavity on my dean caved and I lost all amp ability on it.

By the way, the candy apple red in the photo isn't even close to what it is. It's a lot less of an eyesore and it's really good looking, I've gotten many compliments from orchestra members for it.

If you've got big hands and not much cash, this is a great starter bass. Small hands, look elsewhere, as I am.

I can't believe its been over 10 years since I started playing. This was my first bass and still my main stick when thumping around the house. It is insanely light with a zippy neck (though I did sand mine to a satin finish, not important for beginners). The tone is bright and punchy rolled full, low and muddy rolled off. However the range is not as dynamic as the travel on the knob would imply, they really could have used a toggle switch. I did have a strap anchor come loose once, but the super glue has held it at least 5 years now. If you're looking for your first bass, a backup, or something to just bang around on, this bass as served as all three for me at one point or another. And it's still serving well.

I don't see why so many people are giving this bass such a bad rap. It's one of the best basses I've ever seen/used. It's sounds great, it's a full 34" and the frets are a great fit for my fingers. The tone knob doesn't work as well as it should (it's basically a switch), but it works for me. The volume knob is good, though. It's also said the neck is wide, but I have big hands and it suits me fine. Sounds great through a wah and overdrive, too.